Andrew Korybko
Poland’s role in providing more US LNG to Central &
Eastern Europe is expected to erode Germany’s influence in this region and
accelerate Poland’s revival of its lost Great Power status
The European Council decreed that
the import of Russian gas will be banned across the bloc next year, but with
varying lengths of grace periods for countries with short- and long-term
contracts, the longest of which will last till 1 January 2028. The
Council earlier
admitted that pipeline gas and LNG combined accounted for a little
less than a fifth of the bloc’s imports last year. It should also be mentioned
that the EU continues to import Russian oil too, including indirectly, which
has proven to be similarly
scandalous.
Nevertheless, the EU’s plans
to phase out the remaining fifth of its gas imports from Russia will further
enfeeble its economy by leading to their replacement with more expensive US
LNG, which will predictably result in the costs being passed down to consumers.
This was entirely predictable too since the EU agreed to purchase
$750 billion in US energy by 2028 per the terms of their lopsided
trade deal from last summer that was assessed here as
having turned the EU into the US’ largest-ever vassal state.
Germany is expected to be the most dramatically affected by this development in terms of its domestic politics and geostrategy. As regards the first, a greater decrease in living standards caused by the costs of more expensive US LNG being passed down to consumers could accelerate the AfD’s rise, which would lead to significant political changes if they’re ever able to form a government. Even if they’re kept out of power, such blatant meddling by the elites could worsen political polarization and associated tensions.
On the topic of German
geostrategy, Poland with whom Germany is competing
for influence over Central & Eastern Europe (CEE) is poised to
play a supplementary role in
supplying Czechia
and Slovakia with US LNG via the Swinoujscie
terminal and the planned one in Gdansk. Ukraine will
be supplied too. These countries lie within the sphere of influence that Poland
envisages creating upon the revival
of its lost Great Power status. Czechia and Slovakia are also part of the
Visegrad Group together with Poland.
Hungary is a member too and
could be supplied with US LNG via Poland or Croatia’s Krk terminal, whose expansion is
one of the priority projects of the “Three
Seas Initiative” (3SI) that Poland and Croatia co-founded in 2015 but which
is now led by Warsaw. While Germany commands much more influence over CEE due
to being the EU’s de facto leader and boasting its largest economy, Poland’s
influence over them is increasing through its future role in suppling US LNG,
which might pull them away from Berlin one day.
Energy geopolitics play a
significant role in geostrategy so the impact of the aforesaid trend shouldn’t
be underestimated if it continues to unfold. In that event, the overarching
trend would be the likely decline of German influence over CEE, greatly facilitated
as it was by Germany’s voluntary participation in the US’ anti-Russian
sanctions regime and then the Nord
Stream terrorist attack which pushed it beyond the point of no return.
These might be seen in hindsight as the beginning of a new regional order in
CEE.
While Germany thought that it
would inflict a strategic defeat upon Russia, the US ended up inflicting a
strategic defeat upon Germany by engineering the circumstances whereby its only
Western competitor’s economy would decline.
Together with Poland, whose Anglo-American-backed revival of its Great Power
status conveniently creates a regional wedge between Germany and Russia, the US
is geostrategically re-engineering Europe at Germany’s expense in order to
facilitate Russia’s post-Ukraine containment.
Andrew Korybko, Substack,
October 22, 2025
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